Dish Network will roll out a bundle of TV, phone and broadband services in Colorado within 30 days, a top executive said today.

The Douglas County-based company also plans to offer new satellite-TV subscribers three free months of the Blockbuster by Mail service as part of a promotion that launches in about two weeks.

Dish acquired Blockbuster out of bankruptcy for $320 million last week. The Blockbuster by Mail service starts at $12 a month and allows customers to rent DVDs and games online and have them delivered to their homes, with the option of exchanging titles at brick-and-mortar stores.

Dish’s bundle offering will feature services from Liberty-Bell Telecom, a small Denver-based phone and broadband company Dish acquired this year.

“We’ll have a series of bundles — two-product bundles, three-product bundles, different speeds and so forth — it’ll look familiar to you relative to bundles that are on the market,” said Tom Cullen, Dish executive vice president of sales, marketing and programming.

He didn’t disclose pricing details, but triple-play bundles from competitors generally start with a promotional rate of $99 a month.

“We’ll see how it goes in Colorado, and then we’ll make decisions on how and where to expand,” Cullen said.

Liberty-Bell is a competitive local exchange carrier that buys wholesale access to Qwest’s network. Liberty-Bell is licensed to offer service in 13 of Qwest’s 14-state local phone service territory, with approval from Arizona expected shortly, Cullen said.

Cullen’s remarks came during a session with members of the media at Dish’s annual retailer summit, held this year at the Colorado Convention Center.